Collusion with loyalist paramilitaries not a UK government policy – John Major

ireland
Collusion With Loyalist Paramilitaries Not A Uk Government Policy – John Major
Pat Finucane, © PA Media
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By Rebecca Black, PA

Collusion with loyalist paramilitaries was not a British government policy, former UK prime minister Sir John Major has said.

Mr Major was answering questions from Sinn Féin MP John Finucane, whose father Pat was murdered by loyalists in 1989.

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During a meeting of an Irish government committee, Mr Finucane outlined to Mr Major reports which he said found evidence of collusion.

A report by former UN war crimes prosecutor Sir Desmond de Silva into the murder of Mr Finucane found significant levels of state collusion involving the Army, police and MI5, but said there was no evidence of an “overarching state conspiracy”.

Sir John Major
Sir John Major gives evidence to an Irish government committee, where he was questioned by Sinn Féin MP John Finucane (Oireachtas/PA)

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Mr Major had been giving evidence to the Joint Committee on the Implementation of the Good Friday Agreement, which includes elected members from Northern Ireland as well as the Republic,

Mr Finucane thanked Mr Major for the role he played in the peace process.

He went on to raise the agent Brian Nelson, the murder of his father and the importation of arms from South Africa for loyalist paramilitaries.

“What we know now from investigations and reports by Lord Stevens, by former Canadian supreme court judge Peter Cory, by Sir Desmond De Silva, the scale of collusion between British intelligence organisations and loyalists that was ongoing from the earliest days of the conflict,” Mr Finucane said.

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“All reports confirmed that collusion existed between British intelligence agencies and loyalist paramilitaries.”

 

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Mr Finucane asked Sir John if he had been “briefed on this strategy”.

Mr Major extended his condolences to Mr Finucane on the death of his father.

“I am surprised at the comments you make about collusion between the intelligence agencies and the loyalist paramilitaries. I’m puzzled, I was certainly never briefed on that,” he said.

“I certainly wasn’t aware of either of the things you mentioned, arms from South Africa or indeed anything else, I wasn’t briefed on them then and nor have I been briefed in the papers I have seen subsequently.

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“I do know emphatically it was not the policy that I was aware of, either as foreign secretary or later as prime minister, that there was any such collusion. That was not something that I was aware of.”

 

Mr Major said he would deplore collusion, adding: “It certainly wasn’t something which I was aware, there was a great deal of discussion, Irish politicians with the paramilitary bodies, I think that is certainly beyond doubt, but the intelligence agencies is a proposition I am much less certain about, I could make inquiries, but I don’t think that helps anyone very much at this stage.

“I was certainly not briefed about it so I certainly didn’t actively approve of it because I wasn’t aware of it.”

Mr Finucane also took issue with a comment in Sir John’s opening remarks, when in reference to Sinn Féin’s calls to take the gun out of Irish politics, Mr Major said the Army and the police “did not bomb, murder or knee-cap”.

In reference to the UK government’s controversial draft legacy legislation which proposes to stop court cases around Troubles crimes, Mr Major said he was reluctant to comment as he is no longer in Parliament and not privy to discussions on legacy.

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